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Rey-Huei Chen

Researcher at Academia Sinica

Publications -  39
Citations -  6666

Rey-Huei Chen is an academic researcher from Academia Sinica. The author has contributed to research in topics: Spindle checkpoint & Kinetochore. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 38 publications receiving 6500 citations. Previous affiliations of Rey-Huei Chen include National Defense Medical Center & University of California, San Francisco.

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Nuclear localization and regulation of erk- and rsk-encoded protein kinases.

TL;DR: In vitro studies raise the possibility that the MAP kinase/RSK signal transduction pathway represents a protein-Tyr/Ser/Thr phosphorylation cascade with the spatial distribution and temporal regulation that can account for the rapid transmission of growth-regulating information from the membrane, through the cytoplasm, and to the nucleus.
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Molecular interpretation of ERK signal duration by immediate early gene products

TL;DR: The immediate early gene product c-Fos functions as a sensor for ERK1 and ERK2 signal duration and is identified as a general mechanism by which cells can interpret differences in ERK activation kinetics.
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Association of Spindle Assembly Checkpoint Component XMAD2 with Unattached Kinetochores

TL;DR: This study furthers understanding of the mechanism of cell cycle checkpoints in metazoa and provides a marker for studying the role of the spindle assembly checkpoint in the genetic instability of tumors.
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Localization of Mad2 to Kinetochores Depends on Microtubule Attachment, Not Tension

TL;DR: It is found that microinjecting antibodies against Mad2 caused cells arrested with taxol to exit mitosis after ∼12 min, while uninjected cells remained in mitosis for at least 6 h, demonstrating that Mad2 is necessary for maintenance of the taxol-induced mitotic arrest.
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Spindle Checkpoint Protein Xmad1 Recruits Xmad2 to Unattached Kinetochores

TL;DR: The spindle checkpoint prevents the metaphase to anaphase transition in cells containing defects in the mitotic spindle or in chromosome attachment to the spindle in Xenopus egg extracts using peptide sequences from an 85-kD protein that coimmunoprecipitates with Xmad2 from egg extracts.